2 resultados para Multipoint covalent immobilization of enzymes

em Plymouth Marine Science Electronic Archive (PlyMSEA)


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1. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from the hepatopancreas and mantle tissue of M. edulis was investigated over two years for changes in specific activity (crude enzyme preparations) and the apparent Michaelis constants for G6P and NADP+ (highly purified enzyme preparations). 2. The specific activity of the mantle enzyme was low in summer and autumn and increased in the winter during the time of lipid deposition. In contrast, the specific activity of the hepatopancreas enzyme was high in summer and declined during the autumn and winter. 3. The apparent values for G6P and NADP+ of the mantle enzymechange little during a year. Changes were observed for the hepatopancreas enzyme during the first year but not the second.

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A collection of marine bacteria isolated from a temperate coastal zone has been screened in a programme of biodiscovery. A total of 34 enzymes with biotechnological potential were screened in 374 isolates of marine bacteria. Only two enzymes were found in all isolates while the majority of enzyme activities were present in a smaller proportion of the isolates. A cluster analysis demonstrated no significant correlation between taxonomy and enzyme function. However, there was evidence of co-occurrence of some enzyme activity in the same isolate. In this study marine Proteobacteria had a higher complement of enzymes with biodiscovery potential than Actinobacteria; this contrasts with the terrestrial environment where the Actinobacteria phylum is a proven source of enzymes with important industrial applications. In addition, a number of novel enzyme functions were more abundant in this marine culture collection than would be expected on the basis of knowledge from terrestrial bacteria. There is a strong case for future investigation of marine bacteria as a source for biodiscovery.